Toddler Behaviour

Toddler Behaviour

Toddler behaviour is one of the most common challenges of early parenting, whether it is a tantrum in the check-out aisle; biting a friend; refusing to put the seat belt on or simply getting out of bed multiple times at bedtime. Almost every parent has experienced at least a few of these tricky behaviours.

Most approaches to discipline look at how to manage the behaviours and often involve shouting, punishment and a lot of repetition. If you are trying to extinguish a negative behaviour then those are the options you could look at.

There are three tips that I believe are much more effective when it comes to managing behaviour while still ensuring that a robust little character can thrive. I call them positive boundaries.

Go below the ice-berg– Identify the emotion or intent behind the behaviour and recognize your little one’s sensory personality. Sometimes a behaviour is due to tiredness, a sensitive little one or hunger. Use words to show your child how he is feeling or why he is behaving in a certain way. This becomes a life skill that he can use to identify his emotions before reacting next time. (see A below)

Health & Safety – Draw firm boundaries when there are issues that may harm your child (wearing arm bands), harm another (biting) or harm property (drawing on the car with a stone). Pick your battles because you are fighting every ‘cause’ you will fatigue and start to be inconsistent. Wearing PJ’s to school is not a health and safety issue – let it go. (see B below)

ABC – When you know you need to respond to a behaviour, use the ABC approach:

Acknowledge – “I know you want the red truck” / “I think you are hungry.” These statements help your LO to feel acknowledged and understood

Boundary – “But we do not bite our friends” / “We cannot have a sweet before dinner” – Be firm on the health and safety issues

Choice – “You can wait your turn or find another toy for Johnny” / “You can have some water or play outside until supper time” – Give your toddler options to control

There may still be place for time out and tantrums do need a different approach altogether but starting with these three points, you will start to win your toddler over.